Hama, centre of the anti-regime revolt in Syria, is home to 800,000 people
Residents of Hama where at least three people were shot dead on Tuesday have mobilised to keep the Syrian army out of the flashpoint city at the hub of an anti-regime revolt, activists said.
The Syrian
Observatory for Human Rights, quoting medical sources, said "three people have been killed... and more than 28 others wounded" in the city, which has been surrounded by the military, quoting medical sources.
"Heavy gunfire has been heard in several districts" of Hama, it said.
The activists, contacted by telephone from Nicosia, said a child was among three people shot dead by security forces on Monday on the outskirts of the city, north of Damascus, that is home to 800,000 people.
"Tanks are now posted at access routes to the city except for the northern entrance," said Rami Abdel Rahman, head of the London-based Syrian Observatory.
"Residents have mobilised. They're prepared to die to defend the city if need be rather than allow the army to enter," he told AFP.
"Residents have been sleeping on the streets and put up sand barriers and tyres to block any assault."
Another activist insisted that Hama, where as many as 500,000 people took to the streets for a demonstration on Friday against President Bashar al-Asad's regime, was putting up a "100 percent peaceful" resistance.
"The regime will have to think twice before launching a military operation in the city," he said, on condition of anonymity.
On Monday, more than 20 people were arrested on the fringes of the city, the Observatory said, adding angry residents countered by burning tyres and hurling stones.
Apart from the three killed including 12-year-old Omar Khalluf, between 20 and 25 other people were shot and wounded during the sweep which rounded up as many as 300 people, according to a resident contacted from Nicosia.
Agents in their cars "shot in the air to terrorise residents," one resident said, while warplanes overflew the city emitting sonic booms.
There was no independent confirmation of the reports from activists as Syrian authorities have curbed foreign media coverage.
Asad, faced with a revolt since mid-March, sacked the governor of Hama province on Saturday, a day after the massive rally during which security forces kept out of sight.
Since security forces gunned down 48 protesters in the city on June 3, Hama has escaped the clutches of the regime, according to activists. The next day, more than 100,000 mourners were reported to have taken part in their funerals.
Hama was the scene of a 1982 bloodbath in which an estimated 20,000 people were killed when the army crushed an Islamist revolt against the rule of the president's predecessor and late father, Hafez al-Asad.
In Idlib province, northwest Syria, activists said security forces on Tuesday mounted an assault on the town of Kfar Nubol, the scene of several demonstrations against Asad.
"Tanks have been deployed at crossroads and snipers posted on rooftops of house and government buildings" in the town, said the Syrian Observatory.
The Observatory, in a separate statement, said more than 500 activists and "peaceful demonstrators" had been arrested since last Friday, including lawyer Mussab Barish who was detained in Idlib on Tuesday.
Security forces also arrested Bissan Hamed and three other activists Friday on their way to Lebanon, it said, adding dozens had been rounded up in the Damascus region, including young blogger Omar Asaad and activist Adham al-Qaq.
Asad has decreed two "general" amnesties since the start of the unrest almost four months ago and also lifted a state of emergency that had been in force for five decades.
Rights groups say that more than 1,300 civilians have been killed and 10,000 people arrested by security forces since mid-March.
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